Sec. 10.4 Part 2 PowerPoint

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Chapter 10
Section 10.4 Part 2 – Inference as Decision
I and Type II Errors
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 Type
Definition:
If we reject H0 when H0 is true, we have committed a Type I error.
If we fail to reject H0 when H0 is false, we have committed a Type II
error.
Truth about the population
Conclusion
based on
sample
H0 true
H0 false
(Ha true)
Reject H0
Type I error
Correct
conclusion
Fail to reject
H0
Correct
conclusion
Type II error
Significance Tests: The Basics
When we draw a conclusion from a significance test, we hope our
conclusion will be correct. But sometimes it will be wrong. There are two
types of mistakes we can make. We can reject the null hypothesis when
it’s actually true, known as a Type I error, or we can fail to reject a false
null hypothesis, which is a Type II error.
Perfect Potatoes
Describe a Type I and a Type II error in this setting, and explain the
consequences of each.
• A Type I error would occur if the producer concludes that the proportion of
potatoes with blemishes is greater than 0.08 when the actual proportion is
0.08 (or less). Consequence: The potato-chip producer sends the truckload
of acceptable potatoes away, which may result in lost revenue for the
supplier.
• A Type II error would occur if the producer does not send the truck away
when more than 8% of the potatoes in the shipment have blemishes.
Consequence: The producer uses the truckload of potatoes to make potato
chips. More chips will be made with blemished potatoes, which may upset
consumers.
Significance Tests: The Basics
A potato chip producer and its main supplier agree that each shipment of potatoes
must meet certain quality standards. If the producer determines that more than 8% of
the potatoes in the shipment have “blemishes,” the truck will be sent away to get
another load of potatoes from the supplier. Otherwise, the entire truckload will be
used to make potato chips. To make the decision, a supervisor will inspect a random
sample of potatoes from the shipment. The producer will then perform a significance
test using the hypotheses
H0 : p = 0.08
Ha : p > 0.08
where p is the actual proportion of potatoes with blemishes in a given truckload.
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 Example:
Probabilities
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 Error
For the truckload of potatoes in the previous example, we were testing
H0 : p = 0.08
Ha : p > 0.08
where p is the actual proportion of potatoes with blemishes. Suppose that the
potato-chip producer decides to carry out this test based on a random sample of
500 potatoes using a 5% significance level (α = 0.05).
Assuming H 0 : p  0.08 is true, the sampling distribution of pˆ w ill have:
Shape: Approximately Normal because 500(0.08)= 40 and
500(0.92)= 460 are both at least 10.
Center:  pˆ  p  0.08
Spre ad:  pˆ 
p(1 p)

n
Significance Tests: The Basics
We can assess the performance of a significance test by looking at the
probabilities of the two types of error. That’s because statistical inference
is based on asking, “What would happen if I did this many times?”
The shaded area in the right tail is 5%.
Sample proportion values to the right of
0.08(0.92) the green line at 0.0999 will cause us to
reject
0.0121
H0 even though H0 is true. This will
500
happen in 5% of all possible samples.
That is, P(making a Type I error) = 0.05.
Probabilities
Significance and Type I Error
The significance level α of any fixed level test is the probability of a Type I
error. That is, α is the probability that the test will reject the null
hypothesis H0 when H0 is in fact true. Consider the consequences of a
Type I error before choosing a significance level.
What about Type II errors? A significance test makes a Type II error when it
fails to reject a null hypothesis that really is false. There are many values of
the parameter that satisfy the alternative hypothesis, so we concentrate on
one value. We can calculate the probability that a test does reject H0 when
an alternative is true. This probability is called the power of the test against
that specific alternative.
Definition:
The power of a test against a specific alternative is the probability that
the test will reject H0 at a chosen significance level α when the
specified alternative value of the parameter is true.
Significance Tests: The Basics
The probability of a Type I error is the probability of rejecting H0 when it is
really true. As we can see from the previous example, this is exactly the
significance level of the test.
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 Error
Probabilities
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 Error
What if p = 0.11?
Earlier, we decided to reject
H0 at α = 0.05 if our sample
yielded a sample proportion
to the right of the green line.
Significance Tests: The Basics
The potato-chip producer wonders whether the significance test of H0 : p = 0.08
versus Ha : p > 0.08 based on a random sample of 500 potatoes has enough
power to detect a shipment with, say, 11% blemished potatoes. In this case, a
particular Type II error is to fail to reject H0 : p = 0.08 when p = 0.11.
( pˆ  0.0999 )
Power and Type II Error
The power of a test against any alternative is
1 minus the probability of a Type II error
for that alternative; that is, power = 1 - β.

Since we reject H0 at α= 0.05
if our sample yields a
proportion > 0.0999, we’d
correctly reject the shipment
about 75% of the time.
Studies: The Power of a Statistical Test
Here
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Significance Tests: The Basics
How large a sample should we take when we plan to carry out a
significance test? The answer depends on what alternative values of the
parameter are important to detect.
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 Planning